"Yes We Could"
On January 20, 2009, Senator Barack Hussein Obama made history when he was sworn in as the 44th President of the United States and the country's first African-American President. One-year later, he is struggling to hold his party together, overcome a lagging recession, and deal with a domestic agenda that is logjammed in Congress. Obama rode into Washington on a wave of hope, optimism, and change, but he has squandered much of his political capital on trying to reform healthcare and unpopular decisons on wars overseas and bailouts in Detroit and on Wall Street. Obama's encouraging words of "yes we can" won him the White House, now he may be thinking - "yes we could".
Candidate Obama excited the electorate with his articulate and eloquent words that called for "change" in Washington. Mr. Obama promised to bring forth reforms in healthcare, labor, energy, foreign relations, and even treatment of terrorists. Fast forward to today and most of those promises are hung up in the sausage making of Congress. Obama has focused most of the last year on an unpopular health bill, which has placed him on the opposing side of most voters. Support for the healthcare plan is very low, at 35% it is as low as Bush's approval ratings in 2008. Healthcare reform is near the finish line, but a race in Massachussetts yesterday may have delayed or killed the bill.
Republican Scott Brown defeated Democrat Martha Coakley for the seat left vacant by the late Senator Ted Kennedy. Normally, this race would have been a "gimme" for Coakly, but voters in Massachussetts had another idea in mind. The outcome of the special election would mean nothing in most years, but in a year where a partisan healthcare reform bill requires every vote, Coakley's defeat has the potential to seriously threaten not only healthcare reform, but the entire liberal agenda that Obama is pushing.
America is outraged by the political games that Democrats are playing in Washington and the governor races last year in Virginia and New Jersey, and the special election in Massachussetts are just previews to what we will see in races across the country in 2010. One important note is that Brown pulled 75% of Independents in Massachussetts and the voter turnout was exceptionally heavy, which both have to be increasingly worrisome facts for incumbents that are on the proverbial chopping block in 2010.
Obama has not proved to be much help to his Democratic colleagues. After campaigning on behalf of candidates in all three races, polls show that when Obama is not on the ballot, his base stays home. If Democrats cannot be saved from "touching the hymn of his garment", then they will think twice before ramming unpopular legislation through Congress.
Last year, the House passed a cap and trade bill, and the Senate will take up climate legislation this year. Undoubtetedly, all of our elected offcials will be fatigued from healthcare reform, so I doubt the White House gets a tough bill that will tax carbon emissions or impose artificial caps on greenhouse gases, which are both ideas that the Obama Administration supported. This will aggravate the "greenies" that so fervently supported Team Obama in '08.
Unquestionably, the labor union proposed and Obama supported "card check" bill is in serious jeopardy after the outcome of the special election in Massachussetts that erased Democrats' super majority in the Sentate. Now, include the fact that unions are upset about the 40% excise tax on "Cadillac" healthcare plans that Obama is backing, and I see more of the Democratic base is weakening ahead of an important campaign season.
Obama's performance on national defense has actually been quite surprising. He did not call for the immediate withdrawl of troops in Iraq, he left Robert Gates in place as Defense Secretary, and he increased America's commitment in Afghanistan by sending another 30,000 troops for the war on that front. In addition, Obama has authorized more predator drone attacks in the Afghan and Pakistan region than his predecessor - George Bush. Obama has expanded the war on terror by ordering attacks in Somalia and Yemen. Lastly, he ordered all military personell to interrogate captured terrortists or enemy combatants according to the Army's field manual on interrogation, a manual authored by the Bush Administration. Candidate Obama was anti-war, but President Obama has adjusted quite well to his role as Commander-and-Chief. I suppose his Nobel Peace Prize will have to appease his anti-war supporters for now.
Team Obama ran a breathtaking campaign in 2008, but Obama's administration seems to lack clarity, focus, and no direct ideas for policymaking. I am surprised by their lackluster performance in the first year because his team got everything right in '08. They fully understood how to communicate with the electorate and crafted powerful messages that connected emotionally with voters. They have not connected since '08. Now, the best word to describe Obama and his band of misfits - "disconnected".
They seem to have lost their connection with the hearts of the American people and now they find themselves on the wrong side of most issues. Pushing healthcare reform when America wants to talk about jobs is a perfect example. Mr. Obama made the same mistake President Bush did on immigration, Bush produced a huge and comprehensive bill and the public wanted small, incremental reforms to the system. Thus the latest Quinnipiac poll, which puts his approval at a decending 45%. Personally, I think his approval number is probably slightly high because people do not like to tell pollsters they disapprove of their new president.
Obama's message of hope, optimism, and change resonated in 2008 because voters actually wanted the promises that he made. However, voters have grown impatient as they watch Pelosi and Reid compromise the integrity of the American political process, so they can satisfy party and special interests. Voters are tired of the neverending government spending and deficits that are as "far as the eye can see". Obama promised to take a "scalpel" to the budget, but instead he used a butter knife and only cut $6.9 billion or less than 1% of the bloated federal budget.
After one year in the White House with control of both chambers of Congress, voters no longer accept the mantra of blame everything on the boogeyman - George Bush. Americans elected Barack Obama to lead this country with pragmatism, but he chose to follow the liberal idealogues of his party that believed their wisdom outweighed those of the people. Obama meets behind closed doors to negotiate with Congressional Democrats, but he needs to meet in public and negotiate with the American people.
Mr. Obama has alienated Independents, young adults are losing hope in his campaign promises, and even African-Americans are expressing hidden frustration. Candidate Obama was fresh because of his ability to connect with voters and that provided him a unique opportunity to build a realtionship between the people and their government. President Obama appears to have become what he labeled Senator John McCain on the campaign trail - "more of the same".
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1/20/2010 4:07 PM
uberVU - social comments wrote:
This post was mentioned on Twitter by AlgenonCash: ... Read my blog on Obama's first year in office ... After last night, his new slogan may become - "Yes We Could"!! ... http://tiny.cc/K70Ff

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Mr. Cash,
A well written editorial but it lacks merit and seems EXTREMELY biased. YES WE CAN! YES WE WILL! GO BARACK OBAMA!
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Algenon,
Good message, thanks for being involved in the political world, and quite frankly, I am happy to know you are a fellow conversative.
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Algenon,
I know you and many others are very disappointed that our President has not accomplished more in his first year in office, but I was more disappointed by the hard stance that you took on his presidency. President Obama inherited a financial mess and an unwanted and unjustified war….both of which have worsened in the past year. The struggle to right the ship has been grueling. I feel we need to give him time before we throw darts. I do agree that it was not the year to tackle health care….but heard a southern economist speak yesterday who said, “we will never pass a health care bill, because we all don’t look alike and we only want to take care of those of us who do!” She sits on the far side of the RED party……almost in the same league as Limbaugh, and whose views I could never tolerate. Patience has never been one of my strong suits but I am willing to have it for a man and leader that I continue to admire and who I believe given a chance will make history in a favorable way.
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Algenon,
Thank you for your news and announcements. I am sort of retired from night meetings and out-of-town trips due to age but would like to run over some of my thoughts and get your opinion. It seems to me that there is all this excitement out in the various locations of this country and I just can't get excited. My opinion is that we conservative Americans have good memories and know what little the Republicans did to improve things when we had it all. It seems to me that the Republicans as well as the Democrats are only interested in themselves and their special interests. Have you heard a word about term limits or tort reform? Maybe I am deaf or blind but I have not heard anything and it is my understanding that Richard Burr said he would only serve a certain time but it turned not to be true. I trust a few of our Republicans but they are few and far between. They have forgotten why they are in Washington. As the saying goes "you dance with those who brung you" and that is the voters. I just can't get excited over our recent wins until I can feel they can be trusted. What is your opinion?
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